Coal Bed Methane by Widodo W. Purwanto a Departemen Teknik Kimia b Pengkajian Energi Fakultas Teknik Universitas Indonesia.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Bill Leith Senior Science Advisor for Earthquake and Geologic Hazards U.S. Geological Survey U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey.
Advertisements

Prior activities of FEWE Under the bilateral and multilateral co-operation, several projects to support the rational energy use in different sectors.
And the contamination of Industrial Wasteland Adam Stanley Jonathan Beeson.
Coalbed Methane Extraction in the Sydney Basin Gas and Coal Outburst Seminar November 20, 2002.
1. Introduction Study Area Objectives Literature review Methodology Results Conclusions 2.
“RESERVOIR ENGINEERING”
Chapter 12 Nonrenewable Energy Resources. Energy Efficiency Fuels used for electricity generation in the United States. Coal is the fuel most commonly.
NATURAL GAS. What is it? Waste product produced by bacteria and enzymes that break down organic matter Mostly methane (CH 4 ) with a small amount of other.
© NERC All rights reserved CCS main geological issues Storage capacity Injectivity Containment.
Petroleum, Natural Gas, and Coal
COAL. What is it? Woody substances buried in an oxygen-deprived; heat and pressure convert wood to carbon; process may give off water and methane Most.
Capturing Carbon dioxide Capturing and removing CO 2 from mobile sources is difficult. But CO 2 capture might be feasible for large stationary power plants.
Fossil Fuels and the Environment Definition: complex hydrocarbons from dead organic matter. Stored suns energy, converted to chemical energy via incomplete.
NATURAL GAS. What is it? Waste product produced by bacteria and enzymes that break down organic matter Mostly methane (CH 4 ) with a small amount of other.
1 Technical and Environmental Challenges for CBM Resource Development in India Deep Industries Limited 3rd India Unconventional Gas Forum Conference (IUGF)
Introduction to “Conventional” Natural Gas Kenneth M. Klemow, Ph.D. BIO / EES 105 at Wilkes University.
FOSSIL FUELS II NATURAL GAS. Natural Gas Vehicles (2009)
GEOTHERMAL DIRECT HEAT UTILIZATION. DISTRICT HEATING.
LNG Technology.
Danielle Vaguine Fariha Zaman Harrison Smith. What is Coal? Coal is a fossil fuel formed from the decomposition of organic materials that have been subjected.
Reduced Emission Completions (Green Completions) Lessons Learned from Natural Gas STAR Producers Technology Transfer Workshop Devon Energy and EPA’s Natural.
Advanced Resources International 1 Washington and Oregon: Deep Coal Seam CO 2 Sequestration Potential Scott H. Stevens, Greg Bank Advanced Resources International,
1 Oil and Gas Equipment Types, Controls and Emission Rates Scott F. Archer USDI – BLM National Science & Technology Center September 12, 2007.
Installing Vapor Recovery Units to Reduce Methane Losses
CODATA 2006 Session B9 Clean Energy Recovery from Coal Objectives: Negative public feeling against Coal due to large CO 2 and other pollutants emission.
Carbon Capture & Storage(CCS)
WOC 1 view on the focus and scope regarding CO 2 sequestration in WOC 1 (upstream sector) study area. (according to the experience of CO 2 problem study.
1 Coal Mine Methane Emission Reduc tion Projects By Oleg Tailakov UNDP April 29 th, 2008.
Section 2: Nonrenewable Energy
Fossil Fuels Resource Use Cycle. I. Resource Use Cycle Formation and Concentration Location and Identification Mining and Refining Production Use Disposal.
Chapter 17 Part 2. Fossil fuel deposits are not distributed evenly. There is an abundance of oil in Texas and Alaska, but very little in Maine. The eastern.
Global CBM Geographies: A Remote Sensing Perspective By Y.Dheeraj ( ) R
Fossil Fuels Chapter 19.
Resources and Energy Section 2 Section 2: Nonrenewable Energy Preview Objectives Nonrenewable Energy Fossil Fuels Types of Coal Oil Traps Fossil-Fuel Supplies.
Chapter 11 Resources and Energy
FOSSIL FUEL ANALYSIS World Energy Consumption Where Energy Comes From
OIL AND GOVERNANCE State-owned Enterprises and the World Energy Supply GEMBA 11.
A fossil fuel is a nonrenewable energy resource formed from the remains of organisms that lived long ago; examples include oil, coal, and natural gas.
Fossil Fuels. Energy Use 85% nonrenewable energy Use of coal Use of oil Nuclear has leveled off Developing countries: depend on biomass (fuelwood, charcoal)
Installing Plunger Lift in Gas Wells Lessons Learned from Natural Gas STAR from Natural Gas STAR Exploration & Production, Gulf Coast Environmental Affairs.
CO 2 Sequestration in Coal Seams B. K. Prusty Ph. D. (USA) Scientist Central Institute of Mining and Fuel Research.
FOSSIL FUELS II NATURAL GAS. Mixture of light hydrocarbons, mostly Methane, CH 4. Mixture of light hydrocarbons, mostly Methane, CH 4.
Coal-bed methane. Coal Bed Methane Natural gas found in most coal deposits Similar to natural gas Created from buried plant material which was converted.
CO 2 -sequestration in abandoned coal mines Kris Piessens & Michiel Dusar Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences Geological Survey of Belgium In order.
Methane Mining Justin Anderson ChE 562 November 3, 2004.
Britta Groh Physics 106Spring  Almost 85% of the energy used in the US in 2007 was generated by fossil fuels  Fossil fuel technologies are no.
PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.
Can Carbon Capture and Storage Clean up Fossil Fuels Geoffrey Thyne Enhanced Oil Recovery Institute University of Wyoming.
Natural Gas & Propane Raqwan Griffin 3 rd hour. What is Natural Gas Natural Gas is a mixture of hydrocarbons, predominantly, methane, ethane, propane.
IOT POLY ENGINEERING 3-2 DRILL 09 DEC 08 Answer the following in your notebook: If non-renewable fuels come from renewable plants and animals, why do we.
CHAPTER 7 RESOURCES AND ENERGY SECTION 2: NONRENEWABLE ENERGY.
Example Generating hydrocarbons from coal in- situ (Coal Seam Methane, Underground Coal Gassification)
FOSSIL FUELS II NATURAL GAS. Mixture of light hydrocarbons: Mixture of light hydrocarbons:
COAL MINE PROJECT OPPORTUNITY NALAIKH MINE POWER GENERATION AND HEATING PROJECT TSAGAAN SHONKOR HOLDING COMPANY NALAIKH DISTRICT, MONGOLIA OVERVIEW OF.
 BASIC TERMS AND CONCEPTS (1) Petroleum: refers to crude oil and natural gas or simply oil and gas. (2) Crude oil: refers to hydrocarbon mixtures produced.
Montana’s Regional Ground – Water Monitoring Program in the Powder River Basin Montana Bureau of Mines and Geology.
Petro Data Mgt II- Drilling and Production Petroleum Professor Collins Nwaneri.
Fig. 16-2, p. 357 Oil and natural gas Floating oil drilling platform Oil storage Coal Contour strip mining Oil drilling platform on legs Geothermal energy.
© Cengage Learning 2015 LIVING IN THE ENVIRONMENT, 18e G. TYLER MILLER SCOTT E. SPOOLMAN © Cengage Learning 2015 Nonrenewable Energy-Fossil Fuels.
COAL BED METHANE:EXTRACTION TECHNOLOGY
Petroleum Accounting.
CMM activities in Kazakhstan - Current status and potential prospects
A New Coal-Permeability Model:
Methane resources of the Karaganda coal basin
Module 35 Fossil Fuel Resources
Nonrenewable energy ch17.
Nonrenewable energy ch17.
Encontro CIÊNCIA ’17 José Ricardo Lemes de Almeida, Edmilson Moutinho dos Santos, Manoel João Lemos de Sousa PERSPECTIVES FOR CARBON CAPTURE, UTILIZATION.
Chapter 11 Resources & Energy.
Unit 3: Natural Resources
Presentation transcript:

Coal Bed Methane by Widodo W. Purwanto a Departemen Teknik Kimia b Pengkajian Energi Fakultas Teknik Universitas Indonesia

Content What is coal bed methane? CBM resources CBM production Water management CBM economics

What is CBM? Coal Bed Methane is naturally occurring methane (CH 4 ) with small amounts of other hydrocarbon and non- hydrocarbon gases contained in coal seams as a result of chemical and physical processes. It is often produced at shallow depths through a bore-hole that allows gas and large volumes of water with variable quality to be produced.

CBM vs. CMM Coalbed Methane is methane gas contained in coal. When this gas contains other constituents, it is sometimes referred to as coal seam gas. Coal Mine Methane is methane gas that is released from coal or surrounding rock strata during the process of coal mining

World CBM Resources Estimates for world coalbed methane range from 100 to 260 Tm 3. Collectively, Canada, Russia and China represent 80% of world resources. The largest coal producing countries are also endowed with coalbed methane resources, namely, Australia, the United States, Ukraine, Germany and Poland.

Indonesia’s CBM Resources

US CBM resources

What Controls CBM Production? The rate of CBM production is a product of several factors that vary from basin to basin fracture permeability development, gas migration, coal maturation, coal distribution, geologic structure, CBM completion options, and produced water management. In most basin areas, naturally developed fracture networks are the most sought after areas for CBM development. Areas where geologic structures and localized faulting have occurred tend to induce natural fracturing which increases the production pathways within the coal seam.

Geological aspect Unlike typical clastic and carbonate reservoirs, gases are not stored in the matrix porosity of a coal seam, but are adsorbed onto the surface of micropores This unusual storage system is much more efficient than conventional reservoirs, and a coal seam may hold up to twenty times the volume of gas found in a conventional reservoir of similar size, temperature, and pressure. The exact quantity of sorbed gas is controlled by the confining pressure and surface area of the micropore system. The macroporosity of coals is the cleat system. Cleating is a mining term that describes the naturally occurring fractures found in coal seams. Face cleats are more continuous, and control the flow of gas to a wellbore. Butt cleats, less continuous cleats that form perpendicular to face cleats, are associated with the diffusion of gas from the coal to the face cleats. Cleating is related to both the compaction of the coal and to any tectonic forces acting on it.

Typical production curves for a coal-bed methane well

Relative permeability of gas and water vs. water saturation within coal seams of the Warrior Basin, Alabama. As water saturation decreases, gas production improves as the relative permeability to gas improves substantially

Production of Gas – Coal bed vs. Conventional Reservoir

Life of well Conventional gas wells can produce from a few years to over 50 years. Well duration is affected by technology and as advances are made, reserves are recovered more quickly, which reduces the expected well life. Current estimates for the life of a CBM well vary from 5 to 15 years. CBM wells in the Wyoming portion of the Powder River Basin are estimated at only 7–10 years, while the Montana portion of the same basin was estimated at 10–20 years. Other basins have shown some longer production times, however it is generally feared by the public that basins may be relatively quickly pumped and then abandoned.

CBM Completion Methods CBM wells are completed in several ways, depending upon the type of coal in the basin and fluid content. Each type of coal (sub-bituminous to low-volatile bituminous) offer production options that are different due to the inherent natural fracturing and competency of the coal seams. The sub-bituminous coals are softer and less competent than the higher rank low-volatile bituminous coals and therefore are typically completed and produced using more conventional vertical well bores. The more competent higher rank coals lend themselves to completions using horizontal and vertical well bores.

Typical drilling activities

Drilling Method

Vertical and horizontal well bores

Production scheme of gas and water for a typical coalbed methane well

Enhanced production The CBM industry is exploring new methods of enhancing gas production from older fields that have produced for more than 10 years. Several companies are experimenting with the injection of nitrogen (N2) and carbon dioxide (CO2) into the coal bed to displace methane along the coal face cleats. Generally, the N and/or CO2 molecules replace the methane molecules within the cleats at a ratio of approximately 4 to 1. Coals can replace 25% to 50% of their methane storage capacity with nitrogen. This enhanced production method has a beneficial side effect—the sequestering of CO2. Carbon dioxide is a common by-product of many industrial processes and is considered a green house gas. There are some concerns, however, that injection of CO2 into mineable coals presents a safety hazard, as the mines are required to have a limit of 3% CO2 by volume in the mine air. One potential method for reducing CO2 levels in the mine air is to use a mixture of CO2 and other gases, such as nitrogen.

Difference in production rate by varying injected gas

Coal sorption isotherm

US CBM production

Gas compression & processing Gas produced from CBM wells requires dehydration to remove the water vapor in the gas, and is usually compressed 2 to 3 times before it reaches the sales line. CBM leaves the wellhead at relatively low pressures that range from 2 to 5 pounds per square inch/gauge (psig). The CBM first passes through a field compressor unit, typically a rotary screw compressor that will increase the gas to psig. At this pressure the gas flows through a gathering system on its way to the sales compressor. The sales compressor boosts the pressure to approximately 1200 psig. Following this stage the CBM in the sales line is transported locally or regionally to end-user sites, which are metered. As a CBM field matures, the CBM may contain increased levels of CO2 that needs to be removed prior to being transported to market. Gas processing plants installed on the pipelines typically in conjunction with sales compressors treat the natural gas and remove the CO2 and water vapor.

CBM surface facility

CBM to CNG, LNG, Electricity

Water Management

CBM Roadmap

Legal framework